Your assigned district depends on your home address within town.
Showing latest fiscal year. Full funding history available with a paid plan. View plans →
Illinois uses Evidence-Based Funding to determine whether your school districts have enough money. Here's where they stand.
What is Evidence-Based Funding?
Illinois' Evidence-Based Funding (EBF) formula, enacted in 2017, calculates an Adequacy Target for each district — the estimated cost to provide an adequate education. It then compares each district's available resources to that target.
Districts are assigned to Tiers 1-4 based on their percentage of adequacy. Tier 1 districts (most underfunded) receive the largest share of new state funding.
Tier 1: Below 60% of adequacy
Tier 2: 60% to below 90% of adequacy
Tier 3: 90% to below 100% of adequacy
Tier 4: At or above 100% of adequacy
Source: ISBE Evidence-Based Funding
Avg % of Adequacyi
68%Adequacy Gapi
$30.7MFunding vs. Needi
District Detail
60-90% of adequacy — receives moderate new state funding
The state estimates it costs $58.1M to adequately educate all students in this district. The district currently has $40.3M in resources — that's 69.46% of what it needs. There's a $17.7M gap between what the district has and what it needs.
What it needsi
$58.1M
What it hasi
$40.3M
From the statei
$16.2M
This district is better funded than 10% of districts statewide.
60-90% of adequacy — receives moderate new state funding
The state estimates it costs $37.7M to adequately educate all students in this district. The district currently has $24.8M in resources — that's 65.68% of what it needs. There's a $13.0M gap between what the district has and what it needs.
What it needsi
$37.7M
What it hasi
$24.8M
From the statei
$4.4M
This district is better funded than 6% of districts statewide.
Statewide Tier Distributioni